Matthew Patay's
Note of the Month

 May 2003

Image of the Flag of Switzerland

Image Map of Switzerland

Map and flag images provided by Graphic Maps

This month's featured note is from Switzerland.
The denomination is 50 Franken and the Standard Catalog of World Paper Money (SCWPM) Number is P-68.

The note is dated (19)94.


Obverse image of 50 Franken Banknote from Switzerland

(obverse)

The banknote is dark green and green on multicolored under print. 
 Sophie Taeuber-Arp (1889-1943), a
Swiss artist, is at bottom center.
 
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The following information was obtained from:
National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA)


Sophie Taeuber-Arp

(1889-1943)

One of the most radical artists of the early 20th century, Sophie Taeuber-Arp was born in Davos, Switzerland. She left home at 18 to study textile design in Germany and remained there a half-dozen years, during which time she was inspired by the innovative experiments of the German expressionists.

By 1915 Taeuber was producing paintings that were totally abstract-or, as she preferred to call them (since they were not abstracted from something else), "concrete." That same year she moved back to Switzerland and met the French sculptor, painter, and poet Jean Arp, whom she later married and with whom she collaborated on many artistic projects. Between 1916 and 1919, Taeuber-Arp was active in Zurich's dada group, dancing in its antiestablishment "performances." Dance was an integral part of Taeuber-Arp's life; she studied with the modern-dance pioneer Rudolf von Laban and became close friends with his assistant, Mary Wigman. Constantly exploring different media and techniques, Taeuber-Arp also produced innovative theatrical designs, embroideries, weavings, and sculptures.

After World War I, many of Taeuber-Arp's friends and colleagues moved to Paris, the headquarters of the European avant-garde. However, financial considerations forced her to remain in Zurich, where she had been a professor of textile design at the School of Applied Arts since 1916. An important commission to design the interior of Strasbourg's Café de l'Aubette gave Taeuber-Arp the wherewithal to move to Meudon, near Paris, in 1928. This marked the beginning of the most productive period in the artist's life. She joined a number of artists' organizations, edited and wrote for radical publications, and exhibited her work throughout Europe. Taeuber-Arp and her husband fled to southern France when the Nazis invaded Paris. In late 1942 they returned to Zurich, where she died the following year.

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Reverse image of 50 Franken banknote from Switzerland

(reverse)

Various designs and concepts of the artist Sophie Taeuber-Arp are incorporated into the reverse of the banknote.

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Previous Note of the Month Pages:

December 2000 - Cyprus

January 2001 - Malta February 2001 - Malaysia
March 2001 - Italy April 2001 - Poland May 2001 - Sweden
June 2001 - Hong Kong July 2001 - Great Britain August 2001 - Denmark
September 2001 - Norway October 2001 - Austria November 2001 - Pakistan
December 2001 - Greece January 2002 - Thailand February 2002 - Taiwan
March 2002 - Jordan April 2002 - Czech Republic May 2002 - Euro
June 2002 - Russia July 2002 - Turkey August 2002 - Mexico
September 2002 - India October 2002 - Finland November 2002 - Japan
December 2002 - Argentina January 2003 - Philippines February 2003 - Republic of Ireland
March 2003 - Israel April 2003 - Brazil  

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